Bridgen under fire for defending Rees-Mogg’s Grenfell comments
Jacob Rees-Mogg said on LBC that the Grenfell victims should have used ‘common sense’.
Conservative MP Andrew Bridgen has been criticised for defending Jacob Rees-Mogg over his controversial comments about the Grenfell Tower victims.
Mr Bridgen told BBC Radio 4’s PM show that the Commons leader would have made a “better decision” than the authority figures who were giving the victims advice on the night of the tragedy.
Mr Rees-Mogg told LBC on Monday that the victims should have used “common sense” and ignored fire service guidance to remain in the burning tower block.
Speaking to Radio 4 on Tuesday, Mr Bridgen said: “Jacob is a good friend of mine and he is an extremely intelligent and compassionate human being and his comments regarding Grenfell were uncharacteristically clumsy.
“But I think we have to put them into the context of Jacob.”
When presenter Evan Davis asked if he believed Mr Rees-Mogg meant to say ‘he would not have stayed put’, Mr Bridgen said: “That’s what he meant to say.”
Mr Davis said: “That is exactly what people object to, which is, he is in effect saying ‘I wouldn’t have died because I would be cleverer than the people who took the fire brigade’s advice’.”
Mr Bridgen said: “But we want very clever people running the country, don’t we Evan. That is a by-product of what Jacob is, and that’s why he is in a position of authority.
“What he is actually saying is, he would have made a better decision than the authority figures who gave that advice.”
Andrew Gwynne, Labour’s national campaign co-ordinator, said Mr Bridgen’s comments were “contemptible” and that he should be removed as a parliamentary candidate.
“What Rees-Mogg and Bridgen said go to the poisonous heart of the Tories’ attitude towards people in our communities,” he said.
Labour MP David Lammy said in a tweet that Mr Bridgen’s comments were “unforgivable”.
Mr Rees-Mogg has “profoundly apologised” for his comments on LBC on Monday, during which he said: “I think if either of us were in a fire, whatever the fire brigade said, we would leave the burning building.
“It just seems the common sense thing to do, and it is such a tragedy that that didn’t happen.”